I don't think throwing the word "robot" into words is the best way to approach an idea. Words like ravager, behemoth, and scrapper imply that this is more of an idea that would go into a video game instead of written document.

If you have a more specific concept, then you'll have an easier time exploring its background and giving the reader reason to feel intrigued for it.

Sure, you could write about a robot skeleton, angel OR crow, but why would they be robots in the first place? How would the Foundation know something is an "angel" and not just a humanoid with wings? Who or what did the skeleton formerly belong to, if anything?

No it's not, otherwise there wouldn't be any. Coming up with ideas can take time, but that's okay. You don't have to rush into making a skip, because that's a surefire way to end up with a sub-par article that gets deleted.

To explain it another way, don't start from "Monster" ideas or "Robot" ideas. That locks you into generic thinking.

The "random word pair" method can be helpful for sparking creativity, but you really want them to be things that have you saying "What the hell does that even mean?". Here's some I made by replacing one word of pairs from your list with a random word. (Google "Random Word Generator" if you find yourself sliding into common themes or repeating words.)

Even after you find a phrase that grabs your imagination, however, remember that this is just the seed of an idea, not an idea itself. You'll still need to think for a while and let those ideas it's sparking grow- weed out the ones that sound like things you've read or seen before, and focus on the ones that make you think things like "how would that even work?", "why would they do that?", or "but then what would you do with that?". The answers to those questions are stories, some of which may even be good stories.

As I said, pairs of words are not titles, names, or ideas- they are random phrases which can help kickstart real ideas. If those random pairs do not spark ideas, you can make more until you find something that does.

Another approach you can take: what is it about a robot that has you interested in writing about one? What makes it anomalous, since being a robot is not anomalous? What can you do with it that is completely different from anything you've read before?

That is how you make something interesting: not by imitating what has been done before, but by exploring what has not been done before.

It's near impossible to explore that deep, I just limit myself to what I can do and find the bits in it that I can use, knight armour, robots or even masks or a mask wearer with the mask being part of their face is where I could be creative

That doesn't mean they'll be interested in an animatronic SCP, there isn't one already is there?

You're asking people about what they think would be interesting, and when they give you ideas, you tell them that you don't think those things are interesting. This leads the thread in circles. What are you trying to accomplish here?

if there are any interesting ideas including knight armour, robots or people with masks attached to their face

Probably, but you're thinking way too broadly here. What you're doing is showing us one fruit and asking what we think the smoothie you're going to make will taste like. We have no idea, because there's still a lot more you need to do with the fruit to make it into something people will want to drink.

How are knight armor, robots, and people with permanent masks related? What kind of object are you going to be writing about? What will the story behind the object be; why does it exist, does it have a purpose and is it fulfilled, is anyone special or significant to it, and how do you want the reader to feel about it?

AOS1981, instead of posting multiple comments in succession, please edit your previous post using the "edit" function under the "options" tab to the lower right of every comment. That prevents spam buildup, and it's in the rules.

All that I can do

Answer the questions, then. If you don't give us that information, we can't tell you if anyone here would be interested in reading the eventual draft, or if what you're thinking about is worth drafting up at all.

It all depends if people are willing to try the smoothie or not. Most people judge it by its texture.

I for one would never agree to try a smoothie if all someone told me about it was its texture.

You just have to ask them what they would like and make it as they say

I've said I can make the story and everything I'm just not sure if people would like the creature I've made or not

• They're all related in the way that they aren't made for a purpose. Even if something with a mask for a face looked human, it was still made for a purpose

• Whichever of the three or object I come up with that people like the sound of most

• It's origins remain unknown with little knowings of their history being discovered and kept on a need to know basis

• No, they just exist, robots and knight armour however can be created for a main purpose in their programming

• If it were the mask one then yes they may have someone special to them, Knight armour may also have the same feelings but that depends on how the robot has been programmed to feel if it can feel at all

I've said I can make the story and everything I'm just not sure if people would like the creature I've made or not

People will care more about the story than the creature.

None of the answers you've given are specific enough to base an SCP draft off of. "I want to write an SCP that people will like, and the details I'll include are the details that will make sense" is not a solid idea.

ETA: "They're all related as having no human face nor the human body parts of it. They don't require eat, sleep or drink, they have different ways of communicating sometimes due to the lack of a mouth" as an answer doesn't really make much sense. You might as well say that a bird statue, a car, or a pile of rocks are also related to these. It's better to describe how the things they do have are related, not "they're similar because they don't have some things".

As Sad Xiao just pointed out, robots are not inherently anomalous. Thus you're still at square one (trying to think of an interesting idea), but now with the artificial limitation of insisting that that idea must be a robot. The same goes for "creature", "person", "table lamp", "scary story" or anything other self-imposed restriction: If you limit your thinking, you're automatically going to limit what you come up with, and only make things harder for yourself.

Throw the box away, it's much easier to think when you're outside of it.

Yeah I'm not an advanced thinker really, I could always try a living Knight Armour SCP but it's either that or an Robot cause most biological interesting SCPs have been made like a Leviathan or Bigfoot or even something from another dimension

Hogwash.
I can tell from your comments in this thread that you're smart. The problem is that you're limiting your own thinking by insisting on thinking in terms of generic concepts you've seen many times before. Don't.

From the reply higher in the thread:

It's near impossible to explore that deep, I just limit myself to what I can do and find the bits in it that I can use, knight armour, robots or even masks or a mask wearer with the mask being part of their face is where I could be creative.

Still backwards. It's not going deep, it's thinking outward. Salvage and learn from what has been done before, yes- and then use those tools in ways for which they were never intended until they break.

living weapon (still cliche but it popped into my head so it goes on the list)

living anti-armor (hmm, that one's interesting…)

organism that wraps around another's body and uses it like a puppet (Dang it, I've actually read a book with critters that do that. xP Maybe if I tweak it enough…hmm. lets see what else I can come up with)

Armor with a passive-aggressive personality? (I think Fallout 3 did this. I know New Vegas had a codependent stealth suit, too. Still, one to consider if I can make it radically different.)

Something that causes armor to become organic material so that it loses it's protective qualities?

Dead useless armor (killed by a disgruntled user, maybe?)

A small creature that rides on you and intercepts threats like a shield?

and so on.
As demonstrated, it's perfectly fine to drift away from being direct opposites to things that are similar ideas done in a different way, or even ideas that are only loosely related to the original concept. The idea is that it teaches you to play with ideas, and bend them into all sorts of interesting shapes.

As a final note, if you aren't really feeling very confident on writing specifics, and your main goal is "write something that people like", you may want to take a break from trying to force yourself to write when not inspired. Most of our successful writers start with a concept that they really enjoy and want to explore to completion, not just the vague desire to grab more upvotes.